My husband had an older than god danzig tee that he is terribly attached to but frayed at the cuffs and too small to boot. I cut it up in the middle of the night so I didn't have to hear him whimper.

First up:the pattern is a trace from an existing dress. I've been using this nice A-line pattern for all of my tee recons because the shape is so nice.

To make a sleeve pattern I traced the shape of the sleeve onto paper

and then added some seam allowances and extra at the top for a bit of puff (but not too much with the knit material b/c they end up looking like little football players)

so, the doomed tee,

fold fron in half and put the front pattern over it

for this one the design was too big for the chest area so I did a little patching. I just folded the front pattern piece on the waist line and cut out the design plus a bit of seam allowance on the side.

then took the name off the sleeve and cut out a the bottom plus a bit for seam allowance.

and, here they are:

The back was just a simple cut from the back of the tee

sleeves were cut from the most horrible maternity shirt ever. If you are using stripes, watch which way you cut so they don't end up looking odd.

I also cut out the bottom ruffle. Mine is 3 inches.

So, all pieced together with the ruffle on

to make the lettuce edges I used a rolled hem stitch on the serger while stretching the fabric. The same effect can be made with a zigzag stitch on a regular machine (stitch off edge with a wide but tight zigzag).

My bottom ruffle didn't ruffle very good - probably because I had cut along the not very stretchy way of the knit (check it out, one way stretches more than the other and you want to cut crosswise along the stretch)

So, I decided the dress was missing something at this point so I cut up another tee I'd saved for recons and added a second ruffle (also roll hemmed one edge). I also cut some bias tape from the red tee for the neckline.

This is me attaching the second ruffle. There's lots of ways to do this, but I just stitched if right along above the first (right sides together) and then added a second line of stitching to lift the ruffle high enough for nice layered effect.

The sleeves went on the usual way. (okay, I'm getting lazy, but I can answer questions here if anyone has them)

I chalked a line across the back to mark where I wanted to gather

and shirred 3 short lines there. To clear any confusion here, I wound elastic thread in the bobbin by hand

And then put it in the machine and set it up as usual. A long straight stitch (using regular thead in the needle) gives you the gathered shirring.

Brilliant tutorial. I'm such a sucker for image-heavy step-by-step instructions! You've just inspired me to reconstruct two 3x concert tees that the spouse and I have not been able to relinquish because of the singer's identity/memories.

Nice bit of added flair with the red...that is totally the sort of afterthought for which I am known, in these parts.

Fantastic! Thank you thank you thank you for the tut! I was actually trying to figure out how to do something like this today - lucky me that you've saved me some work! The kid is ADORABLE - looks like she's walkin' the runway.

That is the look she gets when she's on a mission. I'm lying on the floor here, vulnerable, and this was shot moments before she flung herself onto me to try to lick my nose (dont ask, but she somehow figured out this drives me nuts). Look at the picture again - she's not always sweet and innocent!